Meluan Lackless

From The Kingkiller Chronicle Wiki
Revision as of 21:57, 29 December 2018 by Rassarian (talk | contribs) (fancy references)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Lady Meluan Lackless is the daughter of Aculeus Lackless and the sole heir to the Lackless lands. In The Wise Man's Fear, Kvothe successfully helps the Maer court and eventually marry her[1]. She is the only woman who is powerful enough to not be under the king’s control[2]. She has a deep hatred of the Edema Ruh[3], because she believes they kidnapped her sister (see Theories). Because of this, she forces Kvothe out of Severen after learning of his heritage.

Theories

When Kvothe first meets Meluan Lackless, he is struck by her extreme familiarity[3]. It is speculated that this is because her sister, Netalia Lackless, is Kvothe’s mother, as evidenced by a song that Kvothe sings[4]:

Dark Laurian, Arliden’s wife,
Has a face like the blade of a knife
Has a voice like a pricklebrown burr
But can tally a sum like a moneylender.
My sweet *Tally* cannot cook.
But she keeps a tidy ledger-book
For all her faults, I do confess
It’s worth my life
To make my wife
Not tally a lot less

The line “My sweet Tally cannot cook” capitalizes Tally, which may be a nickname for Netalia. Additionally, the line “Not tally a lot less” sounds like “Netalia Lackless”. The name Netalia is referenced in Wise Man’s Fear Chapter 74[5]. Netalia ran off with the Edema Ruh, which matches a story Kvothe tells about how his mother ran off with his father, and they only visited their family (presumably the Lacklesses) once[6].

Finally, when Kvothe chants a rhyme about the Lackless, Kvothe’s mother sternly tells him off[7]>, potentially because it talks about her family.

  1. The Wise Man's Fear, Chapters 67-74
  2. The Wise Man's Fear, Chapter 58, "Courting"
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Wise Man's Fear, Chapter 67, “Telling Faces”
  4. The Wise Man's Fear, Chapter 36, "All This Knowing"
  5. The Wise Man's Fear, Chapter 74, "Rumors"
  6. The Name of the Wind, Chapter 8, "Thieves, Heretics, and Whores"
  7. The Name of the Wind, Chapter 11, "The Binding of Iron"